http://news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20070519/wl_nm/afghan_blast_dc
MAZAR-I-SHARIF, Afghanistan (Reuters) - A suicide bomber killed three German soldiers and six civilians in a crowded street market in northern
Afghanistan on Saturday in an attack claimed by the Taliban.
troops in nearly four years and Berlin's Foreign Minister Frank-Walter Steinmeier called it a "brutal terrorist attack." The soldiers had got out of their vehicle to shop when the bomb went off.
To the south, militants in Kapisa province engaged Afghan and foreign forces overnight in a battle in which several dozen Taliban fighters were believed to have been killed, the U.S.-led coalition said.
Taliban insurgents have stepped up attacks in recent weeks following a winter lull. The Taliban has said it has trained hundreds of suicide bombers.
In Shinwar district near Jalalabad, a remote-controlled bomb killed a police chief and another officer, and wounded three others on Saturday, a local official said.
The spate of attacks this week followed the death of the insurgents' top operational commander, Mullah Dadullah, in a U.S.-led coalition raid last weekend. It was deemed the biggest blow to the Taliban since they were driven from power in 2001.
UNPOPULAR DEPLOYMENT
The suicide bomber struck in the northern city of Kunduz when the German soldiers got out of their patrol vehicle to shop at a market where pots, green tea and other goods were sold.
"Suddenly we heard a big sound. We were frightened," said Aziz, a shopkeeper. "We saw very thick smoke and people rushing to escape."
In addition to the nine killed in the blast, at least 14 people were wounded, according to local security officials.
Three German soldiers were wounded, two of them seriously, German Defence Minister Franz Josef Jung said.
A Taliban commander claimed responsibility for the bombing and said the death toll was higher.
"Our Taliban mujahid (holy warrior) blew himself up near the German troops and killed more than 10 German soldiers," Mullah Hayatullah Khan said. "It was a very successful suicide attack on foreign troops and dozens of German soldiers were injured."
About 3,200 German troops are deployed in Afghanistan, providing security in northern areas that have been relatively safe until recently. The worst violence has been concentrated in southern parts of the country.
In June 2003, four German soldiers were killed and 29 injured when their bus was attacked.
Merkel said German soldiers were making an important contribution to stabilization effort.
"The perpetrators aim to destroy the success of the reconstruction process so far," said Merkel in a statement.
"The international community is firmly committed to helping the people of Afghanistan build a good future for their country."
Many Germans oppose the Afghanistan deployment as their nation struggles to define its international role more than 60 years after the end of World War Two.
In Kapisa province, northeast of Kabul, militants ambushed and tried to trap Afghan and coalition forces before midnight on Friday in the al-Asay valley, a coalition spokesman said.
"Coalition air strikes were called in. Several dozen enemy fighters were believed to have been killed," Major Chris Belcher, a coalition spokesman, said.
A Taliban spokesman said on Saturday a "spy" who betrayed Dadullah to U.S. forces had been captured. "The spy told us, 'I am a U.S. spy and provided information about the Taliban,"' Mullah Shohabudin Atal told Reuters by satellite telephone.